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© 2018

Numerical Methods for Optimal Control Problems

  • Maurizio Falcone
  • Roberto Ferretti
  • Lars Grüne
  • William M. McEneaney
Book

Part of the Springer INdAM Series book series (SINDAMS, volume 29)

Table of contents

  1. Front Matter
    Pages i-x
  2. Luca Mechelli, Stefan Volkwein
    Pages 63-87

About this book

Introduction

The volume presents recent mathematical methods in the area of optimal control with a particular emphasis on the computational aspects and applications. Optimal control theory concerns the determination of control strategies for complex dynamical systems in order to optimize measures of their performance. The field was created in the 1960's, in response to the pressures of the "space race" between the US and the former USSR, but it now has a far wider scope and embraces a variety of areas ranging from process control to traffic flow optimization, renewable resources exploitation and financial market management. These emerging applications require increasingly efficient numerical methods to be developed for their solution – a difficult task due the huge number of variables. Providing an up-to-date overview of several recent methods in this area, including fast dynamic programming algorithms, model predictive control and max-plus techniques, this book is intended for researchers, graduate students and applied scientists working in the area of control problems, differential games and their applications.

Keywords

Optimal Control Computational Methods Dynamic Programming Model Predictive Control Max-plus algebra

Editors and affiliations

  • Maurizio Falcone
    • 1
  • Roberto Ferretti
    • 2
  • Lars Grüne
    • 3
  • William M. McEneaney
    • 4
  1. 1.Department of MathematicsSapienza University of RomeRomaItaly
  2. 2.Department of Mathematics & PhysicsRoma Tre UniversityRomeItaly
  3. 3.Mathematical InstitutUniversität BayreuthBayreuthGermany
  4. 4.Department of Mechanical and Aerospace EngineeringUniversity of California, San DiegoLa JollaUSA

About the editors

Maurizio Falcone is Professor of Numerical Analysis at the University of Rome "La Sapienza" since 2001.   He held visiting positions at several institutions including ENSTA (Paris), the IMA (Minneapolis), Paris 6 and 7, the Russian Academy of Sciences (Moscow and Ekaterinburg) and UCLA. He serves as associate editor for the journal "Dynamic Games and Applications" and  has authored a monograph and about 80 papers in international journals.
His research interests include numerical analysis, control theory and differential games.

Roberto Ferretti is Associate Professor of Numerical Analysis at Roma Tre University since 2001. He has been an invited professor in UCLA (USA), Universitet Goroda Pereslavlya (Russia), ENSTA-Paristech and IRMA (France), TU Munich (Germany) and UP Madrid (Spain). He has authored a monograph and more than 40 papers on international journals/volumes, in topics ranging from semi-Lagrangian schemes to optimal control, level set methods, image processing and computational fluid Dynamics.

Lars Grüne is Professor for Applied Mathematics at the University of Bayreuth, Germany. He obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Augsburg in 1996 and his habilitation from Goethe University in Frankfurt/M in 2001. He held visiting positions at the Sapienza in Rome (Italy) and at the University of Newcastle (Australia) and is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Mathematics of Control, Signals and Systems. His research interests lie in the areas of mathematical systems theory and optimal control.

William M. McEneaney received B.S. and M.S. degrees in Mathematics from Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst., followed by M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Applied Mathematics from Brown Univ. He has held academic positions at Carnegie Mellon Univ. and North Carolina State Univ., prior to his current appointment at Univ. of California, San Diego. His non-academic positions have included Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Air Force Office of Scientific Research. His interests include Stochastic Control and Games, Max-Plus Algebraic Numerical Methods, and the Principle of Stationary Action.

Bibliographic information